Ancestral Landscape by Jim Carpenter,
Acrylic Mixed Media on Crescent Board, 28" x 20"
"Work and life were intertwined. A weaver, for example, might weave eight or nine yards on a rainy day. On other days...he might weave just two yards before he did 'sundry jobs about the lathe and in the yard & wrote a letter in the evening.' Or he might go cherry picking."
Playing Hard
I'm a day late posting my painting for
day 2 because I didn't
finish my painting yesterday. You might think that "a painting a day"
is about making a painting in a day from scratch, a blank canvas, but for me it
is also the opportunity to finish paintings that I have been stalling on. I
easily have 20 or so paintings in various stages of completion.
For Day 2 of the challenge I chose to "finish" a
problematic landscape I started in 2013. Have you ever had a project that you
felt you could work on forever and never finish? That is the point I got to
with this landscape, I made adjustment after adjustment and just could not get
it to balance out. After dinner and a
Chi Kung class about "conserving the chi" I decided to go to bed early and just solve the painting the next
day, or, if necessary, tear it up and move on to the next painting.
I was reminded of
Matthew Daub's rhetorical question: "Why
are you so intent on saving a painting?" And his suggestion: "Throw
it under the table and just start a new one!" I was ready to throw it
under the table. But I also know my own creative process and its time table.
For 30 years without fail I would plunge into despair at the end of the fifth
week of play rehearsals, convinced that the play would be a disaster. And
again, without fail, at the end of the sixth week, I would know for certain
that the play was going to work. I experience the same thing with my painting.
I get to the point where I am certain that after pushing through the tough
spots nothing can save it and I want to throw it under the table. But I also
remember that some of my most personally satisfying paintings come from
paintings that I destroy first, and then recover. So I pretty much destroyed
the landscape in an hour and went to bed at 12:20 a.m.
Original landscape
We might call this the "Week 6" phase!
What I woke up to!
This painting is on crescent board and I used various gel mediums
and some collage to create a variety of surface textures on it, so I could not
lift the paint off the way I usually do on paper. Instead I just painted over
it, using a palette knife and later a brush. I began to see some possibilities
emerging even then, but it would mean moving away from an abstract landscape
into something that incorporated figures. So what else is new?
It was a choice. I admit that I felt the pull to let the figures
emerge, even though I didn't know what I would do with the landscape
orientation. In retrospect, I see that I still do not easily listen to my
intuition. I have to argue with it a little bit. I could write a play.
Intuition: Oh look! There are some nice figures imbedded in
there!
Me: Oh, yes. But I am painting an abstract landscape, not
figures. So forget about it.
Intuition: Ok. But, the figures are really cool. And the
landscape is uh, ok whatever. Follow that path until you get frustrated with
it, then block it out, and paint what I was suggesting in the first place.
This painting has all of the things I love to see in my
paintings: the immediacy of improvisation, a sense of discovery, the notion of
unearthing the remnants of some long lost work of art, the sense of the past
always being present, ancestral history, reverence. It may take some doing, but
it subverts the notion of "job" and supports my quest for idleness.